Discovery-driven planning
The
major reason for failure in initiating new growth projects in uncertain
environments is the basic tenet of classic project management - the initial
strategy is assumed to be correct, and large sums are expended without dealing
with the fundamental assumptions.
Because
assumptions about the unknown generally turn out to be wrong, new ventures inevitably
experience deviations from their original planned targets. Indeed, new ventures
frequently require fundamental redirection.
The
probability of failure simply comes with the territory. But many failures could
be prevented or their cost contained if senior managers approached innovative
ventures with the right planning and control tools.
Companies
possess all the data necessary to determine that a real opportunity exists but
make implicit and inappropriate assumptions about their ability to implement
their plan.
Even
worse than individual biases are the social and political processes that
effectively inhibit organizational learning. Because the test of a conventional
plan’s correctness is how close projections came to outcomes, there is huge
pressure on people involved in growth programs to stick to the plan and make it
happen at all costs. People stick with guesses they have made public, rather
than admit to possible ignorance. They’ll defend a failing approach to the
brink of and sometimes past the brink of disaster, rather than make the more
sensible decision to redirect or shut down a strategic project.
So you
need to invest small amounts of money- money you can afford to lose-to get the
information that you need so that you can invest more confidently. So, as you
invest in learning.
Discovery-driven
planning is a powerful tool for any significant strategic undertaking that is
fraught with uncertainty- new product or market ventures, technology
development, joint ventures, strategic alliances, even major systems
redevelopment. Unlike platform-based planning, in which much is known,
discovery-driven planning forces managers to articulate what they don’t know,
and it forces a discipline for learning. As a planning tool, it thus raises the
visibility of the make-or-break uncertainties common to new ventures and helps
managers address them at the lowest possible cost.
Discovery-driven
planning is vastly different from conventional planning. In conventional
planning, success means delivering numbers close to what you thought you would
deliver. In discovery-driven planning, success means generating the maximum
amount of useful learning for the minimum expenditure. Discovery-driven
planning is most useful when the situation is highly uncertain. Discovery-driven
planning recognizes that planning for a new venture involves envisioning the
unknown.
Discovery-driven
planning offers a systematic way to uncover the dangerous implicit assumptions
that would otherwise slip unnoticed and thus unchallenged into the plan. The
process imposes a strict discipline that is captured in four related documents:
a reverse income statement, which models the basic economics of the business;
pro forma operations specs, which lay out the operations needed to run the
business; a key assumptions checklist, which is used to ensure that assumptions
are checked; and a milestone planning chart, which specifies the assumptions to
be tested at each project milestone. As the venture unfolds and new data are
uncovered, each of the documents is updated.
Projects
implemented in highly uncertain conditions must be driven by an adaptive
process in which the key uncertainties/assumptions are constantly in the
forefront of project leaders’ minds. The key learning objectives are how to (1)
define the key uncertainties, (2) prioritize the key uncertainties, and (3)
develop a milestone-driven implementation plan based on these uncertainties.